They said it was not there. To cut a long story short,
that stock went on down until it fell below the price I had paid for it. Then it began to
eat up the margin, and when at last I got out I was very badly crippled.
When it was too late, I found out what had become of Orion’s money. Any other
human being would have sent a check, but he sent gold. The hotel clerk put it in the safe
and went on vacation, and there it had reposed all this time enjoying its fatal work, no
doubt. Another man might have thought to tell me that the money was not in a letter,
but was in an express package, but it never occurred to Orion to do that.
Later, Mr. Camp gave me another chance. He agreed to
buy
our
Tennessee land for two
hundred thousand dollars, pay a part of the amount in cash and give long notes for the rest.
His scheme was to import foreigners from grape-growing and wine-making districts in
Europe, settle them on the land, and turn it into a wine-growing country. He knew what
Mr. Longworth thought of those Tennessee grapes, and was satisfied. I sent the contracts
and things to Orion for his signature, he being one of the three heirs. But they arrived at
a bad time—in a doubly bad time, in fact. The temperance virtue was temporarily upon
him in strong force, and he wrote and said that he would not be a party to debauching
the country with wine. Also he said how could he know whether Mr. Camp was going
to deal fairly and honestly with those poor people from Europe or not?—and so, without
waiting to find out, he quashed the whole trade, and there it fell, never to be brought to
life again. The land, from being suddenly worth two hundred thousand dollars, became
as suddenly worth what it was before—nothing, and
taxes to pay. I had paid the taxes
and the other expenses for some years, but I dropped the
Tennessee Land there, and have
never taken any interest in it since, pecuniarily or otherwise, until yesterday.
I had supposed, until yesterday, that Orion had frittered away the last acre, and
indeed that was his own impression. But a gentleman arrived yesterday from Tennessee
and brought a map showing that by a correction of the ancient surveys we still own a
thousand acres, in a coal district, out of the hundred thousand acres which my father
left us when he died in 1847. The gentleman brought a proposition; also he brought a
reputable and well-to-do citizen of New York. The proposition was that the Tennesseean
gentleman should sell that land; that the New York gentleman should pay all the
expenses and fight all the lawsuits, in case any should turn up, and that of such profit
as might eventuate the Tennesseean gentleman should take a third, the New Yorker a
third, and Sam Moffett and his
sister (Mrs.
Charles L. Webster), and I—who are the
surviving heirs—the remaining third.
This time I hope we shall get rid of the Tennessee Land for good and all and never
hear of it again.
I came East in January 1867.
Orion remained in
Carson City perhaps a year longer.
Then he sold his twelve-thousand-dollar
house and its furniture for thirty-five hundred
in greenbacks at about 60 per cent discount. He and his wife took first-class passage in
the steamer for New York. In New York they stopped at an expensive hotel; explored the
city in an expensive way; then fled to
Keokuk, and arrived there about as nearly penniless
as they were when they had migrated thence in July ’61. About 1871 or ’72 they came to
New York. They were obliged to go somewhere.
Orion had been trying to make a living
in the law ever since he had arrived from the Pacific coast, but he had secured only two
cases. Those he was to try free of charge—but the possible result will never be known,
because the parties settled the cases out of court without his
help.
I had bought my
mother a house in
Keokuk. I was giving her a stated sum monthly,
and Orion another stated sum. They all lived together in the house. Orion could have
had all the work he wanted, at good wages, in the composing-room of the
Gate City, (a
daily paper) but his wife had been a
Governor’s wife and she was not able to permit that
degradation. It was better, in her eyes, that they live upon charity.
But, as I say, they came East and Orion got a job as proof-reader on the
New York
Evening Post at ten dollars a week.
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